Well, we have something called the five-country conference, which already is a platform for information sharing, particularly on asylum claimants: that's Canada, the U.S., the U.K., Australia, and New Zealand. We have very complementary laws and systems.
We already have an information-sharing agreement that has helped to identify, for example, bogus asylum claimants. In one case, there was a Somali national who made failed refugee claims in Australia and the U.S. and then showed up in the U.K. trying to make a third claim. He was identified. That's the kind of usefulness of this information sharing.
The main initiative now is expanding information sharing with the United States in the context of “Beyond the Border”, the continental security perimeter action plan, but we would not preclude more robust information-sharing agreements with other liberal democracies that are respectful of privacy rights and serious about national security.
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